![]() The Club Badge created for the Homecoming Year 2009 |
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![]() Ian Strang's etching |
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The Early History of the Club
1859-1959 by Robert Rodger, M.A., B.Sc. The Dumbarton Burns Club was formed on the centenary celebration of the poet's birth in January, 1859. At first the club seems to have had a somewhat chequered existence. If formal records of its meetings were kept in its early years, these are no longer extant. The earliest minute in the archives of the club is one of a meeting of " admirers of Burns" in the Elephant Hotel on Friday, 24th January, 1873, "for the purpose of resuscitating the Burns Club in Dumbarton." Writing in 1894, however, Donald MacLeod, the local historian, who was president of the club in 1877 and 1895, in his account of "The Clubs of Dumbarton Past and Present," was able to give the names of some of the founders who attended the first anniversary supper in 1859. " The chair was occupied by R. G. Mitchell, Esq., Procurator Fiscal of the County, supported right and left by Messrs J. B. Risk and T. Macintosh —Dr. B. M. Richard, being the croupier, had Messrs James Ure and Henry Adams flanking him on each side." 1859
marked the end of a decade of
expansion in the Burgh. Until recently the town had not
extended From its resuscitation in 1873 until
the end of the
century the membership of the club was restricted, except in
special circumstances,
to 36. The committee met once a year, usually within a fortnight from
the
anniversary of the poet's birth, to arrange for the annual
supper, to purge
the roll and admit new members, and to recommend
the names of office bearers for the ensuing year
to the annual general meeting which was held on the evening of the
supper. Its
proceedings were recorded in terms
of a
commendable verbal economy.
The attendance
at the supper seldom exceeded 30 and was often less.
During the evening
every individual present was required to contribute to the
entertainment by
" speech or song, toast or sentiment, reading or recitation," and the
company never failed to include a minor bard or two. The
restriction in membership tended
to the
formation of junior clubs. In the nineties there were at least six other Burns Cubs
in the town — Alclutha,
Co-operative, Helenslea,
Jolly Beggars, Lennox, and Conservative. It was customary for greetings, often in verse,
to be exchanged
among the clubs, and there are records of
One of the Oldest The
Burns Federation was formed in 1885. The Dumbarton Burns Club was
affiliated in
1886 and is No. 10 on the roll. In October, 1958, there were 355 Burns Clubs and
Scottish Societies in the Federation,
and the Dumbarton Club is the llth
oldest. The
anniversary supper was not held in 1900 owing to the war in South
Africa,
nor in 1901 owing to the
death of Queen
Victoria. By 1914
the membership had
increased to
50. The club's
activities were suspended
during the
First World War.
They were resumed
in 1919. Towards the
end of June, 1787, Burns visited
Dumbarton and spent some
days at Levengrove House, the home
of John McAulay, then Town Clerk.
While he
was there he was royally
entertained. Thereafter a strong tradition persisted that
he had been
proposed for admission as a gratis or honorary burgess
of the burgh. The omission of Burns' name from the
Roll of Burgesses was
popularly ascribed
to the opposition of the
Rev. James Oliphant, at that time minister of the parish,
a man of
marked personality
and great influence, the memory
of whose ready wit
and
eccentricity is enshrined in many stories which were
current a century later. This was a reasonable assumption, for Oliphant's previous charge had been at Kilmarnock, where his extreme Calvinistic tenets had incurred the satire of Burns, who in his " Ordination " wrote:
"
Cursed
common sense, that imp of hell Cam'
in wi' Maggie
Lauder; But
Oliphant aft made her
yell, And
Russell sair misca'ed her." From its
earliest years the club's minutes
record
the sending of donations to various charities, chief among
them being the Jean
Armour Burns Houses and the National Burns Memorial and Cottage Houses
at
Mauchline. The club has also given substantial support to the Scottish
National
Dictionary Fund. It has
subscribed for three complete
copies
of the dictionary which will consist of 10 volumes. One of these will
be
retained in the club and the
others
presented to Dumbarton Library and Dumbarton Academy. So
far five
volumes have been published and are available to the public on
the reference
shelves of the local library and to the senior pupils of the Academy. The club has competed in the McLennan
Cup Bowling
Competition for Burns Clubs since its inception. It has won the cup on
two
occasions, in 1926 and in 1958. |
6 Founder Members ![]()
Archibald Denny Dr B M Richard 1825 - 1866 1807 - 1874
![]() Dr W Graham Henry Adams 1833 - 1877 1807 - 1880 James Denny Joseph Irvine 1808 - 1864 1830 - 1891 |